The album has been remastered and extended including rarities.
Pioneering UK electronic dance music artists Utah Saints have announced the forthcoming reissue of their eponymous debut album, out of print since its original release over 30 years ago, on Vinyl 2xLP, 2xCD and DSPs on October 18 in the US and on October 19 in the UK for National Album Day. The album has been remastered and extended including rarities and choice reworks by the likes of David Morales, CJ Bolland and Andrew Weatherall. It will be housed in special limited edition mirror board packaging for National Album Day 2024.
"We're honoured to be taking part in National Album Day 2024. Our debut album 'Utah Saints' was released just over 30 years ago, and we are super-excited for it to be re-issued this October on double vinyl and double CD. National Album Day is such a great event, helping us all to value the arts and creativity - we need ideas more than anything! Thank you to everyone who has supported Utah Saints, in whatever capacity, we value every single one of you." Jez Willis, Utah Saints
As prelude to the album reissue, fellow Yorkshiremen Soul Mass Transit System come through with a bumping speed garage edit of their dance classic, "What Can You Do For Me," upping the BPMs and injecting massive peaks, fills and a monster bass to ignite proceedings.
Utah Saints are one of the most important acts since the inception of the electronic dance music phenomenon. Early adopters of sampling, they brought the artform - used chiefly in hip-hop in the 1980s - into new realms.
Formed in Leeds in 1991, the group consisted of Jez Willis and Tim Garbutt. Jez, a former fanzine writer, mobile DJ and rock band bass player, and Tim, a skilled DMC finalist DJ from Harrogate, started collaborating when Jez brought Tim a rough track featuring an Annie Lennox sample. Their innovative use of samplers and turntables quickly became central to the Utah Saints signature sound.
Their debut track, "What Can You Do For Me," incorporated samples from Eurythmics and Gwen Guthrie. Pressing 1,000 orange vinyl records, they sent one to Pete Tong at BBC Radio 1, who played it immediately, leading to a slew of record labels vying to sign them. They chose London Records, where Tong was head of A&R. The immediate Top 10 success of this single led to a remix request from Annie Lennox herself for her single "Little Bird", further boosting their profile.
Their next hit, the Top 5 "Something Good," sampled Kate Bush's "Cloudbusting," and remains to this day the only sample usage Kate Bush has ever granted. The song's iconic stuttering refrain "U-U-U-Utah Saints" became widely recognized. This single's success prompted the BBC to use it for their coverage of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. When the label realised that it was also going to be a massive hit, they promptly offered the guys an album deal.
The self-titled album went Top 10 in the UK and earned Utah Saints 3 x Top 10 singles ("Something Good," "What Can You Do For Me," and "Believe In Me"). Recorded at Lion Studios in Leeds, the album skilfully mixed various genres and featured an adventurous selection of covers and samples from artists as diverse as Simple Minds, and Human League, to Sylvester and Slayer.
As they developed into a live band in the early 90s incorporating rock, dance and hip-hop elements, playing bigger and bigger shows and conquering the charts, the sampler became their lead singer and turntable scratching acted as their lead guitarist.
The KLF's Bill Drummond described Utah Saints as "the first true stadium house band," an idea they ran with a year later, supporting U2 on the European leg of their Zoo TV Tour in 1993. Playing these massive gigs they paved the way for future rock/rave acts like The Prodigy and the Chemical Brothers.
Utah Saints' have rightly earned their place as pioneering figures in electronic dance music, with "Something Good" and "What Can You Do For Me" having been revisited and re-entered the UK Charts in both the 00s and 10s respectively. Today, having transitioned to a two-person DJ team, Utah Saints continue to thrive. Their 500+ club nights they have promoted in Leeds and Edinburgh remain a strong part of club history and they continue to program The Ring stage at Lancashire's legendary Beatherder Festival.
They will be performing on these dates below with a headline, sold-out show in London on September 14. For more information and to purchase tickets, please visit utahsaints.com.
Pre-order/save the 30th anniversary re-issue of Utah Saints' debut, self-titled album HERE, out October 18 in US and October 19 in the UK.
Sep 14, 2024 - 100 Club - London, UK
Sep 21, 2024 - Creative Folkestone Quarterhouse - Folkestone, UK
Sep 27, 2024 - Ibiza Weekender - North Devon, UK**
Sep 28, 2024 - Eclectic Ballroom - Peterborough, UK
Oct 19, 2024 - Sunbird Records - Darwen, UK
Nov 9, 2024 - All Back to Minehead w/Fatboy Slim - Minehead, UK**
Nov 16, 2024 - Shiiine on Weekender 2024 - Butlin's Minehead - Minehead, UK**
Nov 30, 2024 - Love Zoo Unit 13 - Nottingham, UK**
Dec 13, 2024 - Hare & Hounds - Venue 2 - Birmingham, UK
**Festival Appearance
Disc One
New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84)
What Can You Do For Me
Soulution
Believe In Me
Too Much To Swallow (Part 1)
Something Good
I Want You
States Of Mind
Trance Atlantic Glide
Kinetic Synthetic
My Mind Must Be Free
Disc Two
Utah Saints Take on The Theme From Mortal Kombat
What Can You Do For Me (Madness Mix)
Something Good (051 Mix)
I Want You (DJ Tim's Funky Bliss Mix- Short Version)
I Still Think Of You (Perfecto Mix)
Highlander (CJ Bolland Mix)
Ohio (DJ Misjah Mix)
Star (Union Jack Mix)
I Want You (Sabres 130)
photo credit: London Records
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